A stage system includes a fine-motion stage on which a substrate holding member for holding a substrate is mounted, a rough-motion stage on which the fine-motion stage is mounted, a stage for supporting and moving a substrate, and a probe configured to measure a potential of the substrate without contact thereto, the probe being supported by the rough-motion stage so as to be opposed to one of a bottom face and a side face of the substrate.
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1. A stage system, comprising:
a fine-motion stage on which a substrate holding member for holding a substrate is mounted;
a rough-motion stage on which said fine-motion stage is mounted, without contact; and
a chopper-type probe configured to measure a potential of the substrate without contact thereto,
wherein said probe is supported by said rough-motion stage without contact to said fine-motion stage and is disposed so as to be opposed to one of a bottom face and a side face of the substrate.
9. A stage system, comprising:
a substrate holding member;
a first electrode provided on said substrate holding member and configured to electrostatically attract a substrate;
a stage configured to carry said substrate holding member thereon and to move;
only three protrusions provided on one of said substrate holding member and said stage and configured to support said substrate holding member relative to said stage; and
a second electrode provided around said protrusions and configured to electrostatically attract said substrate holding member toward said stage.
11. An exposure apparatus for exposing a substrate to a pattern, said exposure apparatus comprising:
a stage system comprising:
(i) a fine-motion stage on which a substrate holding member for holding a substrate is mounted;
(ii) a rough-motion stage on which said fine-motion stage is mounted, without contact; and
(iii) a chopper-type probe configured to measure a potential of the substrate without contact thereto,
wherein said probe is supported by said rough-motion stage without contact to said fine-motion stage and is disposed so as to be opposed to one of a bottom face and a side face of the substrate.
12. A device manufacturing method comprising:
a step of exposing a substrate to a pattern by use of an exposure apparatus, which includes a stage apparatus comprising:
(i) a fine-motion stage on which a substrate holding member for holding a substrate is mounted;
(ii) a rough-motion stage on which the fine-motion stage is mounted, without contact; and
(iii) a chopper-type probe configured to measure a potential of the substrate without contact thereto,
wherein the probe is supported by the rough-motion stage without contact to the fine-motion stage and is disposed so as to be opposed to one of a bottom face and a side face of the substrate.
13. An exposure apparatus for exposing a substrate to a pattern, said exposure apparatus comprising:
a stage system comprising:
(i) a substrate holding member;
(ii) a first electrode provided on said substrate holding member and configured to electrostatically attract a substrate;
(iii) a stage configured to carry said substrate holding member thereon and to move, wherein only three protrusions are provided on one of said substrate holding member and said stage and configured to support said substrate holding member relative to said stage; and
(iv) a second electrode provided around said protrusions and configured to electrostatically attract said substrate holding member toward said stage.
14. A device manufacturing method comprising:
a step of exposing a substrate to a pattern by use of an exposure apparatus, which includes a stage apparatus comprising:
(i) a substrate holding member;
(ii) a first electrode provided on the substrate holding member and configured to electrostatically attract a substrate;
(iii) a stage configured to carry the substrate holding member thereon and to move, wherein only three protrusions are provided on one of the substrate holding member and the stage and configured to support the substrate holding member relative to the stage; and
(iv) a second electrode provided around the protrusions and configured to electrostatically attract the substrate holding member toward the stage.
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This invention relates to the manufacture of devices, such as microdevices, for example. More particularly, the invention concerns technology for holding a substrate in photolithography, for example.
In charged-particle beam pattern drawing apparatuses, if the electrical potential of a wafer during the pattern drawing is not 0V, the track of a charged-particle beam is adversely influenced thereby and the pattern drawing precision is, therefore, degraded. In order to avoid this, conventionally, as shown in
Japanese Laid-Open Patent Application No. 4-250615 discloses a structure such that, as shown in
Japanese Laid-Open Patent Application No. 9-237827 discloses a technique of replacing an electrostatic chuck 201 while a sample 202 on a stage 209 is held attracted to the electrostatic chuck 201, as well as a technique of fixing the electrostatic chuck 201 onto the stage 209. According to this document, as shown in
The structure such as shown in
As described above, the structure shown in
Generally, the wafer surface is coated with a photosensitive material, called a resist. The resist is a factor that causes an error in the measurement of the wafer potential. Usually, the non-contact type surface electrometer measures the electrostatic capacitance between the electrometer probe and a measurement object (wafer, in this case) through a chopper, and the measured value is AC modulated and is outputted as a potential. If, therefore, there is dispersion in the film thickness of the resist, the electrostatic capacitance between the wafer and the probe varies and the output becomes unstable.
Considering the conventional structure, such as shown in
On the other hand, generally, an electrostatic chuck needs electrical transfer (connection) between the chuck and a base member, such as a stage, to afford a potential to an electrode. For this reason, in many cases, a contact type connector comprising a leaf spring, for example, is used between them. However, if the spring constant of the leaf spring is made large so as to secure electrical connection, the rigidity between the base member and the chuck in this portion cannot be disregarded. In a worst case, the fixation is no longer the three-point support, and the three-point supporting structure does not function. Thus, it is desirable to provide a structure that enables an assured electrical connection while securing good reproducibility of chuck distortion.
It is accordingly an object of the present invention to provide a unique and an effective technique related to holding a substrate, by which at least one of the inconveniences described above can be solved.
In accordance with an aspect of the present invention, there is provided a stage system, comprising a stage for supporting and moving a substrate, and a probe for measuring a potential of a substrate without contact thereto, the probe being supported by the stage so as to be opposed to one of a bottom face and a side face of the substrate.
In accordance with another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a stage system, comprising a substrate holding member for holding a substrate, the substrate holding member having a protrusion and a first electrode, the first electrode being provided inside the substrate holding member and adjacent to the protrusion, a terminal for adjusting a potential of the first electrode, and a stage for supporting and moving the substrate holding member through the terminal.
In accordance with a further aspect of the present invention, there is provided a substrate holding system, comprising a plurality of protrusions to be supported by a stage, and a plurality of first electrodes disposed adjacent to the plurality of protrusions, respectively, and for electrostatically attracting the stage.
These and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent upon a consideration of the following description of the preferred embodiments of the present invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will now be described with reference to the attached drawings.
One preferred form of the present invention aims at enabling accurate measurement of the potential of a substrate upon a stage without contact thereto and without use of a complicated mechanism, and it proposed a structure for doing this. In this embodiment, the substrate is a wafer being coated with a resist, and such a potential measuring method that the wafer potential is measured to a portion of the wafer not coated with the resist, by use of a non-contact electrometer, is proposed. Also, a chuck structure suitable to such measurement is proposed, wherein an electrostatic chuck is provided with an opening or notch for accommodating a non-contact electrometer for measuring the wafer potential from the bottom face of the wafer, to thereby enable that the wafer potential is measured constantly without the pattern drawing. The attracting electrode of this electrostatic chuck is a bipolar type, and the wafer electrode is controlled to zero by changing the applied voltage to the electrode, on the basis of an output of the non-contact electrometer. This eliminates the necessity of a structure that an earth pin is stuck into a wafer.
Here, the electrode area or the electrode applied voltage may be set so as to make, equal to zero, the total sum of products of the areas of the electrodes and the applied voltages and, on that occasion, the variable amount of the applied voltage can be made small. Also, when the area of the electrode to which a variable voltage is applied is made largest, among the electrodes, the variable amount of the applied voltage can also be made small. Additionally, when the applied voltage to the electrode having a relatively small absolute value of an applied voltage is made variable, the influence of a variation in electrostatic attraction force to the attraction of the substrate can be reduced. Also, when such an electrostatic chuck should function also as a vacuum chuck, the opening for the non-contact electrometer may be used as a vacuum evacuation bore for vacuum attraction. This makes the structure very simple. Furthermore, in a positioning system having a rough-motion and a fine-motion stage, the non-contact electrometer should preferably be disposed at the rough-motion stage side.
Another preferred form of the present invention aims at achieving an attracting force necessary for fixing a substrate holding member such as an electrostatic chuck to a stage, while securing advantages of a structure that supports the substrate holding member at three points, and it proposes a structure effective to solve this. In this embodiment, as a method of fixing a chuck to a base member such as stage means, for example, three supporting members are provided at the bottom side of the chuck, and additionally, electrodes for activating a non-contact electrostatic attraction force adjacent to the supporting members are provided, whereby the attracting force is assured. Each of the three supporting members may particularly preferably have a structure having a protrusion. An electrode for substrate attraction and an electrode for activating electrostatic attraction are electrically connected, by which the number of electrical wires and connection required to be transferred between the base member and the chuck, can be reduced. When the electrode has a monopole structure, the number of electrical wires and connection can be reduced much more.
In an electrostatic chuck having three protrusions such as described above, these protrusions and/or the portions around them may be used as a terminal for electrical connection with a base member for fixing the electrostatic chuck. This maximizes the advantage of the three-point support and fixation.
The preferred forms of the present invention described above may be embodied in combination.
Referring to the drawings, embodiments of the present invention will now be described.
The non-contact probe 5 is mounted on the rough-motion stage 16. Through the throughbore 6 formed in the chuck 1, the probe 5 is opposed to the bottom face of the wafer 2 placed on the chuck 1. Thus, by means of a non-contact electrometer (not shown) connected to the non-contact electrometer probe 5, the electrical potential of the wafer 2 can be measured from its bottom face side, without contact thereto. The non-contact electrometer probe 5 having a chopper being vibrated continuously during the potential measurement is mounted on the rough-motion stage 16 and, additionally, wires or cooling tubes (not shown) connected to or annexed to the non-contact electrometer probes 5 are provided on the rough-motion stage. This effectively presents degradation of positioning precision of the fine-motion stage 9.
If the potential is measured from the top face side of the wafer 2, as is conventional, it is difficult to measure the wafer potential during the pattern drawing operation without interference with the track of the charged-particle beam. With the structure of this embodiment, to the contrary, the wafer potential can be measured easily. Here, as compared with the gap between the wafer 2 and the non-contact type electrometer probe 5, the wafer 2 can be regarded as being an electrically conductive material and, therefore, the wafer 2 as a whole can be regarded as having the same potential. For this reason, there arises no problem even if the potential at the bottom face of the wafer 2 is measured and the measured potential is regarded as the potential of the top surface of the wafer 2. Furthermore, since the bottom face of the wafer has no resist, which may be an error factor in the potential measurement, the potential measurement from the bottom face side can assure more exact measurement as compared with the measurement from the top surface side.
On the basis of the result of measurement of the potential of the wafer 2, made as described above, the potential applied to an electrode (not shown) mounted on the wafer bottom surface through an insulative member (or dielectric member) may be adjusted, as disclosed in the aforementioned Japanese Laid-Open Patent Application No. 4-250615, and the potential of the wafer 2 can be made equal to zero V (ground potential). When the chuck 1 is an electrostatic chuck having a wafer attracting electrode, the electrode for wafer attraction may be used also as the wafer potential adjusting electrode.
However, practically, it is difficult to make the wafer potential equal to 0V merely by applying voltage to the electrodes, corresponding to the required attracting forces, respectively. In fact, depending on the balance of the applied voltages, the adjustment width of voltage V1 may become large, and the attracting force at the region corresponding to the electrode 3a may largely differ from a design value (required attracting force) when the wafer 2 potential is made equal to 0V. In consideration of this, it is necessary to make such an electrode structure that the wafer potential becomes substantially equal to zero V on the basis of the applied voltages (V1-V3) determined in accordance with the required attracting force. Taking this into account, in this embodiment, the electrode area is designed so that the total sum of the products of applied voltages to the electrodes and the areas of them becomes equal to zero. Namely, when expressed by an equation, the electrodes are designed to satisfy the following relation:
ΣiSi·Vi=0
where S is the electrode area, V is the applied voltage to the electrode, and subscript “i” corresponds to the number of each electrode.
For example, if the applied voltages to the electrodes 3a, 3b and 3c as calculated from the required attracting force are determined as a ratio 1000:500:−350 [V], theoretically, the wafer potential can be made equal to 0V in response to the application of these voltages if the ratio of electrode areas of the electrodes 3a-3c is made equal to 1:5:10. Since, however, there is dispersion of contact electrical resistance due to the state of contact between the wafer 2 and the chuck 1, for example, or because of an influence of a charged particle flowing into the wafer during the pattern drawing, the wafer potential cannot be exactly equal to zero V. Thus, the applied voltage V1 to the electrode 3c may be finely adjusted, by which the wafer potential can be controlled to 0V. As regards the adjustment amount for the voltage V1, although it depends on the electrode design, practically, the amount can be held to 10% or less of the voltage V1.
The applied voltage to the electrode 3c is made variable, and this is because the required attracting force of the region corresponding to the electrode 3c is relatively small. Namely, in this region, the influence of variation in the attracting force resulting from changing the applied voltage is relatively small and, for this reason, the electrode 3c is chosen as the electrode for which the applied voltage is to be made variable. Furthermore, as seen from the equation set forth above, if it is necessary to make the voltage changing amount for such a variable voltage electrode small, enlarging the electrode S is effective. Also, if the electrode corresponding to the region in which the required electrostatic attraction force is smallest is chosen as a variable voltage electrode, the area of that electrode may be made largest, and on that occasion, the voltage changing amount can be held smallest.
In exposure apparatuses, only a wafer may not be replaced each time it is exposed, but rather, as disclosed in Japanese Laid-Open Patent Application No. 2003-142393, the wafer may be replaced while it is kept mounted on the chuck. Namely, there may be a system in which the chuck conveyance is performed for every wafer replacement. On that occasion, the wafer can be held on the chuck beforehand, outside the exposure space, and yet the holding operation can be done in the atmosphere. Thus, wafer vacuum attraction can be done. For vacuum attraction, it is necessary to use a throughbore for vacuum evacuation of the clearance between the wafer and the chuck. In this embodiment, vacuum attraction is attainable by use of the aforementioned throughbore 6, which is provided in the electrostatic chuck 1 in relation to the non-contact electrometer. Thus, the present embodiment enables a chuck that functions as an electrostatic chuck and also as a vacuum chuck, with a very simple structure.
Referring to FIGS. 2 and 4-6, the manner of fixing an electrostatic chuck to a stage will be explained.
In order to assure a good reproducibility of chuck distortion as the chuck 1 is fixed to the stage 9, the chuck 1 is supported by the stage 9 by use of three protrusions 10, each having an area as small as possible (e.g., ø2 mm or less). Because the pins have a small area, there is almost no attracting force acting between the chuck 1 and the stage 9. In this embodiment, therefore, the chuck supporting member 4 is made of a dielectric material and there are electrodes 3d, 3e and 3f provided so that an attraction force is applied around the pin 10 without any contact. Here, for simplicity of the electrodes, each electrode is made with a monopole structure, and, additionally, an earth electrode 12 provided in a stage side portion to be opposed to the electrode 3d (3d, 3f). Further, in order to assure that the attracting force acts through this electrode, even without contact, the height of the pin 10 is set to be not greater than 20 μm.
In the conventional structure of
In this embodiment, three protrusions are provided at the bottom face of the chuck to constitute the three-point support. However, three protrusions may be provided that the stage side as shown in
Now, electrical transfer between the electrostatic chuck 1 and the stage 9 will be explained. As shown in
Next, the structure of the stage 9 side for fixedly supporting the chuck 1 will be explained. The stage 9 is provided with voltage supplying terminals 13 to be associated with the conductive protrusions 10 of the chuck 1, each terminal having a diameter corresponding to or larger than the protrusion 10. Electrical wires are connected to these terminals, so that voltages corresponding to the electrodes, respectively, can be applied to them. Also, in association with the chuck fixing electrodes 3d-3f, there are earth electrodes 12 each being grounded. For providing insulation between the voltage supplying terminal 13 and the earth electrode 12, there is an insulating member 14 provided between them.
In the foregoing, the structure that enables a three-point chuck supporting structure most effectively has been described. Practically, however, in some cases, it is not easy to ensure electrical connections between the chuck and the stage, of a number not greater than three. In such a case, as shown in
Usually, a wafer is coated with a resist. In recent years, however, for the purpose of avoiding the possibility of dust particles caught between a wafer and a chuck, the bottom face of the wafer, as well as the side face thereof, are washed and, therefore, any resist material at the side face and bottom face is removed completely. As a result, when the wafer bottom face or side face is used as the target of potential measurement, as in the embodiments of the present invention described hereinbefore, the adverse influence of the resist material can be avoided sufficiently, such that an error factor for measurement of a surface potential can be removed effectively.
By providing a throughbore for an electrometer, in a chuck, as in the first and second embodiments as described hereinbefore, the non-contact electrometer can be disposed with a simple structure and without interfering with the charged particle beam pattern drawing operation. This facilitates application of a method of controlling the wafer potential to 0V without use of a grounding needle. Also, as regards the chuck fixing method, a non-contact attracting force may be produced around the chuck supporting members as in the second embodiment, and this secures an attracting force even if the supporting members are made small. Further, by the connecting chuck fixing electrode and the substrate attracting electrode with each other, the number of transferring wires or electrical connections with the base member can be reduced. Furthermore, the three-point supporting members for chuck fixation may be used also as voltage supplying terminals, and on that occasion, the technical advantages of the three-point supporting fixation can be maximized.
Next, referring to
The exposure apparatus of this embodiment can be used for device manufacture for microdevices such as a semiconductor device (e.g., a semiconductor integrated circuit), a micromachine, or a thin-film magnetic head, for example. It is arranged so that exposure light (generally used to refer to various energies such as visible light, ultraviolet light, EUV light, X-rays, electron beams, charged particle beams, and so on) as exposure energy is projected from a light source 61 onto a semiconductor wafer W (substrate) by a projection lens 62 (generally used to refer to various optical elements such as a refractive lens, a reflection lens, a catadioptric lens system, a charged particle lens, and so on), as a projection system, through a reticle R (original). By this, a desired pattern can be formed on the substrate W.
In this exposure apparatus, a guide 51 and a linear motor stator 21 are fixedly mounted on a base table 51. The linear motor stator 21 comprises a multi-phase electromagnetic coil, and a linear motor movable element 31 comprises a permanent magnet group. The linear motor movable element 31 is connected as a movable element 53 to a movable guide 54 (stage), and with the drive of the linear motor M1, the movable guide 54 is moved along a direction of a normal to the sheet of the drawing. The movable portion 53 is supported by a static pressure bearing 55 with reference to the upper surface of the base table 51, while, on the other hand, it is supported by a static pressure bearing 56 with reference to the side face of the guide 52.
A movable stage 57 is a stage, which is provided to straddle the movable guide 54, and it is supported by a static pressure bearing 58. The stage 57 is driven by a linear motor M2 similar to the motor M1, and it can move in leftward and rightward directions in the sheet of the drawing, with reference to the movable guide 54. The motion of the movable stage 57 is measured by means of a mirror 59, fixedly mounted on the movable stage 57, and an interferometer 60.
The wafer W (substrate) is placed on a chuck, which is mounted on the movable stage 57, and a pattern of the reticle R (original) is transferred in a reduced scale to different regions on the wafer W through a step-and-repeat operation or step-and-scan operation.
Here, it should be noted that this embodiment can particularly suitably be applied to an exposure apparatus of the type that, without use of a reticle R, a circuit pattern is directly drawn on a semiconductor wafer by use of a charged particle beam.
The present invention is not limited to the embodiments described hereinbefore. It can be applied with appropriate modifications within the scope of the invention. For example, although in the embodiments described above the invention has been applied to an exposure apparatus, the present invention is applicable also to a charged particle beam pattern drawing apparatus wherein a desired pattern is produced on a substrate by use of a charged particle beam such as an electron beam or ion beam, for example, or, alternatively, to a sample observation system, a precision measuring system, and so on. In such a sample observation system, the substrate may be a planar sample itself or a substrate on which the sample is placed. When the substrate is a semiconductor wafer, the portion where a pattern is formed is, like the portion coated with a resist, included as the portion where the bare material of the substrate is not cropped out.
As described hereinbefore, the present invention provides an effective and superior technique in relation to the substrate holding.
While the invention has been described with reference to the structure disclosed herein, it is not confined to the details set forth and this application is intended to cover such modifications or changes as may come within the purposes of the improvements or the scope of the following claims.
This application claims priority from Japanese Patent Application no. 187432/2003 filed Jule 30, 2003, which is hereby incorporated by reference.
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